Inequality Factors
Global Governance Factors
Migration Factors
Health Factors
100

What is the extreme poverty line?

$1.90

Do you think its use by the WB as the unit of analysis of poverty is valid?  

100

What percentage of the world is not protected from poverty?

  1. 70%

  2. Does our progress mean we are doing something right? 

100

According to Stuart Rosewarne and Nicola Piper, what are the two perspectives from which migration can be viewed?

National interest, which endorses migration control, and internationalist human rights, which supports the right to migrate both inward and outward.

100

What does WHO stand for in the health world?

World Health Organization

200

What did Oritz-Juarez argue as being an endemic feature of the neoliberalist GPE?

  • Absolute poverty  

  • Do you agree with him? 

200

What led the WB to abandon their stance on ending poverty?

  1. The cold war 

  2. Do you think this stance could be abandoned again?

200

What does Estevez call the system of laws and policies that depopulate resource-rich areas through violence and state repression?

The necropolitical apparatus of forced migration.

200

What country relies heavily on private healthcare funded by medical insurance, with only limited public programs for groups like the uninsured elderly?

United States 
300

What does Ortiz-Juarez think is required for us to achieve global financial equality?

  • Large redistribution of wealth/a new GPE 

  • Do you agree with this?

300

What is one shortcoming of the IMF in terms of it representing the interests of smaller countries?

Voting shares contingent on money invested, Veto power, etc. 

300

In what ways does Estevez suggest that migration laws serve the interests of wealthy nations and private power?

Migration laws restrict the movement of the poorest and most vulnerable, creating a system where wealthy nations can exploit resources in the Global South while preventing the displaced from seeking refuge in richer countries. This serves the economic interests of private corporations and state elites by maintaining the status quo of inequality and resource extraction.

300

What year did the World Health Organization (WHO) predicts there will be a shortage of 18 million healthcare workers worldwide

2030

400

What organization is responsible for the widespread belief that global poverty has fallen dramatically since the 1980s?  

  • The WB  

  • Why are they eager to validate that belief?

400

What is neoliberalism?

  1. Hands off, free trade, deregulating markets 

  2. Do you think neoliberalism interacts with the authority of global governing 

400

How do security concerns, as discussed by Rosewarne and Piper, contribute to the failures of global economic governance in addressing migration and poverty, particularly in the context of the "safe third country" concept?

Security concerns are used as a pretext to justify tighter migration controls, disproportionately impacting migrants from poorer countries. This approach legitimizes the use of neighboring countries in the Global South as open-air detention centers for migrants, allowing wealthy nations to avoid accepting refugees and shifting the responsibility for managing migration to less wealthy nations. Ultimately, this focus on security detracts from addressing poverty and structural inequalities, framing migrants as security threats rather than as individuals fleeing from dire circumstances.

400

What 3 countries have fewer than two nurses for the same population size?

Cameroon, Somalia, and Chad

500

Has the income inequality gap between the West and the developing countries been growing or shrinking under current global governance?

  • Growing  

  • Name 3 reasons 

500

What does TRIPS stand for

  1. Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Right

  2. As technology and innovation expands, in what ways can global governance de-westernize shared knowledge?

500

How do Estevez and Rosewarne/Piper differ in their critiques of migration control policies as tools of global economic governance?

Estevez focuses on how migration laws depopulate resource-rich areas and enforce inequality through violence, while Rosewarne and Piper critique migration controls for prioritizing national security over global justice. Both critiques highlight how these policies serve the interests of wealthier nations, but Estevez is more focused on the use of violence and resource extraction as key drivers of forced migration.

500

What year was the discovery of antibiotics made?

1920s